M
melbanglican
Guest
HOORAY! At last, some simple common sense from North of the Border! Most of the people who participate in this forum who live in Europe, Australasia or Canada have lived under governments run by Social-Democratic or socialist parties. I doubt very much that any of them have been ‘oppressed’ on religious or any other grounds. I’m almost always appalled by the ignorance of Americans on the subject of socialism.Here’s some things to note;
Socialized programs actually do work. Do you really want the fire department and police privatized? They’re controlled by the government. The government also pays for the highways you drive on when you go to work. We have also been given public education, probably the greatest thing modern government has ever done. I’ve seen a lot of people on this forum say we need to end things like medicare and welfare because it’s socialism and people will just be charitable if government is not involved. However, this Utopian world is just a fantasy. If it was reality, there would never have been a need for government to get involved in welfare and medical expenses
- Having some socialism does not instantly make your country a socialist one. A purely socialist society can’t work, but neither can a country with no socialism at all.
- All Marxists are socialists, but not are socialists are Marxists.
- Many who identify as socialists actually are not completely socialist
The USA actually had a long and proud history of left-wing activity that produced real benefits that Americans enjoy today. Trades unions were tiny, weak and almost entirely ineffective until Socialists and Communists took on the arduous, and often dangerous, work of forming industrial trades unions in the 1930s and 1940s.
Likewise, the most significant and dangerous work in the earliest civil rights cases in the South was handled by the Communist Party of the USA (Scottsboro Boys et al), not by the NAACP. Ironically, perhaps, it was the CPUSA who initially stood up for American justice for African-Americans in the South, for example in Alabama, Georgia and Mississipi. Two works on this period that might inform are ‘Hammer and Hoe’ (Robin D G Kelley) and ‘The Narrative Hosea Hunter’ (Nell Irvin Painter). CP union organisers went to places that others wouldn’t dare go, and even got into lethal ‘shooting matches’ with sheriff’s deputies in Alabama in 1931 (Camp Hill and Reeltown).
Socialist (Eugene Debs) and Communist candidates for the Presidency also did surprisingly well in elections before 1940. It is estimated (I’ve forgotten the source) that approximately 1,000,000 Americans may have passed through the ranks of the CPUSA between 1932 and 1945. Most of them were brave people committed to legal, social and economic justice for all Americans. That is why they joined - ‘The Party’ was doing something about the Depression while others seemed to be twiddling their thumbs!
Much of the work done by communist and socialists during the period before the War was done in collaboration with people in mainstream political parties and with churches and clergy.
The demise of the CP occurred as a result of the cynical manoeuverings of an alcoholic, hysteria-mongering politician from Wisconsin, and the refusal of the leadership of Party to become ‘Americanised’. The CP remained rigidly aligned with the Comintern (aka Moscow) and refused to adapt to peculiarly American circumstances. When it did so, people walked away in droves.
I urge the Americans in this forum to go and look at their own history, and respond less hysterically to the word ‘socialism’. You may find that there’s something in it for you, and that there’s an echo of the actions and words of Our Lord and the earliest church in much of it.
Peace be with you
Gift from God!